Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid with James Coburn: DVD Cover
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Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid Director: Sam Peckinpah Cast: James Coburn, Kris Kristofferson, Bob Dylan

DVD - 2 Disc Set - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Subtitled Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/10/2006
  • Original Release: 1973
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 3,649

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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; Commentary by Peckinpah biographers/documentarians Nick Redman, Paul Seydor, Garner Simmons and David Weddle; Sam Peckinpah trailer gallery; 2 new featurettes: deconstructing Part and Billy; One Foot in the Groove: Remembering Sam Peckinpah and other things, One For the Money and Sam's Song-original songs performed by Kris Kristofferson and Donny Fritts

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
1. Fowl Killings [3:51]
2. Times Have Changed [3:08]
3. Credits [1:42]
4. New Sheriff's Target [3:11]
5. In Poor Company [3:17]
6. Loco Bob [4:53]
7. Meeting Their Maker [4:37]
8. Smiling When He Left [4:05]
9. Getting a Posse Started [3:51]
10. Dead Inside [3:14]
11. Reward Rejected [3:47]
12. Holes In the Chest [7:04]
13. Baker's Badge [4:15]
14. Hideout Shootout [3:25]
15. Chisum's Regulators [3:30]
16. Garrett and Chisum [6:11]
17. Where To Next [4:00]
18. Keeping Time With Lemuel [3:05]
19. Bullet for Alamosa Bill [4:13]
20. Sociable with Garrett [1:55]
21. When You See Billy [5:15]
22. Ambushing Paco's Ambushers [2:29]
23. Garrett's Rest Stop [4:16]
24. Hope They Spell My Name Right [3:54]
25. Old Pere's House [4:44]
26. Idyll and Vigil [4:10]
27. I Killed the Kid [5:10]
28. End Credits [5:13]
Disc #2 -- Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
1. Fowl Killings [6:02]
2. Times Have Changed [4:13]
3. New Sheriff's Target [3:17]
4. In Poor Company [3:53]
5. Loco Bob [5:33]
6. Meeting Their Maker [4:38]
7. Smiling When He Left [4:26]
8. Getting a Posse Started [4:42]
9. Billy [2:02]
10. Reward Rejected [3:21]
11. Holes in the chest [5:57]
12. Baker's Badge [4:35]
13. Hideout Shootout [3:33]
14. Chisum's Regulator's [3:56]
15. Garrett and Chisum [4:38]
16. Where to Next [4:00]
17. Keeping Time With Lamuel [3:26]
18. Bullet for Alamosa Bill [:37]
19. Sociable With Garrett [4:06]
20. When You See Billy [1:25]
21. Poe's Cruel Situation [5:15]
22. Ambushing Paco's Ambushers [2:35]
23. Garrett's Rest Stop [3:09]
24. Hope They Spell My Name Right [3:58]
25. Old Pete's House [3:06]
26. Idyll and Vigil [6:48]
27. I Killed the Kid [4:10]
28. Full Circle [5:48]
29. End Credits [3:52]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

The Wild Bunch may be Sam Peckinpah's all-around greatest film, but this looser, moodier elegy to the dying frontier is his most poetic. The film employs an emblematic Old West storyline: Outlaw-turned-sheriff Pat Garrett (James Coburn) must hunt down and capture his old partner in crime, the legendary Billy the Kid (Kris Kristofferson). Bob Dylan supplied the haunting soundtrack, and his songs work with Peckinpah's starkly beautiful images of the Mexican landscape -- all harsh sunlight filtered through desert dust -- to create an atmosphere that lingers long after the movie ends. Like McCabe and Mrs. Miller, also made in the early 1970s, Pat Garret is as much a lament for the passing of the '60s counterculture as it is for the Old West. The outlaw Billy represents youth and freedom from the Establishment: In the film's romanticized worldview, maturity equals imprisonment and/or death. As Billy, the handsome, slightly puffy Kristofferson is the film's weak link; still making the transition, at that point, from folk singer to screen actor, he lacks the edginess to convincingly embody such an icon. But Coburn, the lean and silver-haired Western veteran, is superb, projecting an aura of melancholy and regret that infuses the entire film. The onscreen presense of Dylan, playing an elfin, enigmatic character called Alias, is nothing more than set dressing, but his songs supply an omniscient voice that articulates emotions and ideas that the taciturn characters can't. The film's most moving passage is the wordless scene in which a sheriff, played by Slim Pickens, expires on the banks of a river to the hymnlike strains of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" as High Noon's Katy Jurado watches in tears. The last of Peckinpah's westerns, Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid was his poignant and lyrical farewell to the genre he helped revise Kryssa Schemmerling, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

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January 17, 2006: One of the greatest westerns ever made! Everybody should own a copy of this one.Beautiful film.